UK Launches Green Finance Strategy

The British government hopes to raise more than £1 billion annually toward reaching net zero by the end of the decade.



The British government is aiming to raise at least £500 million ($619.3 million) per year in private finance by 2027, rising to more than £1 billion annually by 2030, as part of its goal to reach net zero of greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. The target was released as part of the U.K.’s “Green Finance Strategy” report.

“We need a healthy and thriving natural environment to meet our Net Zero goals and build our resilience to climate change,” U.K. Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Thérèse Coffey said in a release. “Our announcement today sends a signal that the opportunities from investing in our farmland, forestry, peatlands and marine areas are great and offer long term rewards for people and nature.”

The Green Finance Strategy includes:

  • An agreement that farmers will be supported to better measure their emission sources through carbon audits by 2024;
  • Publishing a Nature Markets Framework that will enable revenue streams from different markets to be combined to support projects with goals such as increasing biodiversity and improving water quality;
  • Providing four authority areas with funding of up to £1 million each as part of the Local Investment in Natural Capital program, which is intended to attract investment in local priorities for nature; and
  • Working with the British Standards Institution to develop a range of nature investment standards.

The U.K. government also published its 2030 Strategic Framework for international climate and nature action and International Climate Finance Strategy. The 2030 Strategic Framework is intended to build resilience to current and future climate impacts, as well as to stop and reverse biodiversity loss. The International Climate Finance strategy outlines the U.K.’s commitment to spend £11.6 billion of international climate finance between 2021-22 and 2025-26 to help developing countries adapt to climate change.

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“To decarbonize in 27 years, and meet our environmental objectives as set out in our Environmental Improvement Plan, and deliver energy security, we will require a step-change in levels of investment,” the report stated. “The global transition to a resilient, nature-positive, net zero economy will see trillions of pounds reallocated and invested into new technologies, services and infrastructure.”

The Green Finance Strategy has been welcomed by U.K. regulators the Financial Conduct Authority, the Financial Reporting Council, the Bank of England and The Pensions Regulatory.

“Managing the risks and opportunities associated with climate change is crucial to maintain the resilience of the financial system,” the regulators said in a joint statement. [Source]

The strategy was also lauded by state-owned agencies UK Export Finance, the British Business Bank, UK Research and Innovation, and the UK Infrastructure Bank.

“Moving our economy towards net zero is both an environmental necessity and a huge economic opportunity,” said a joint statement from the organizations. “There is a real chance to drive business value, unlock growth, and scale technologies across all sectors, regions and nations of the United Kingdom.”

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Gold’s Price Nears Record High, Driven by Uneasiness

Shaky banks and other worries propel the haven investment upward.

The world has the jitters, so guess what asset is closing in on its record high?

Gold, the classic refuge investment, is fetching $2,020 per ounce, nearing the $2,069 peak set in pandemic-panicked 2020.

History suggests that the yellow metal will keep on trucking. It finished 2023’s first quarter up 7.8%. As Bespoke Investment Group observed in a commentary, “In the 25 prior years gold has posted a gain in Q1, it has averaged a rest-of-year gain of 12.4%.”

Bespoke added that drops in yield, such as those Treasurys have shown of late, always aid gold’s advance. Treasurys, which pay interest, is the premier haven investment, and gold kicks off zero income for investors.

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Even more important are the worry factors, according to the World Gold Council, the metal’s trade group, pointing to the recent convulsions among regional banks and the failure of two lenders, Signature and Silicon Valley Bank

“With a U.S. recession still on the cards, growing systemic risk adds to gold’s case,” the group wrote in an investors’ note. Up ahead is the pending debt ceiling fight on Capitol Hill, which threatens to make Washington default on its debt.

Gold has also outpaced other asset classes thus far in 2023, up 10.9%, according to BlackRock. In second place are European stocks, with the MSCI Europe ahead 10.7%.

The commodity’s good fortune also is reflected in gold mining stock performance. The VanEck Gold Miners exchange-traded fund is ahead 18.6% this year after losing money in 2022, per research firm Morningstar. Production costs for an ounce of gold  have not changed, so ascending bullion prices fatten the miners’ earnings.

So while investors and analysts remain on edge about, well, everything, expect gold to have the edge when it comes to in-demand asset classes.

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